Sunday, December 02, 2018

2 Sem 2019 - Part Nine

Joachim Kühn New Trio
Love & Peace




By Karl Ackermann
The German ACT label achieved global recognition when they issued the Esbjorn Svensson Trio album Viaticum (2005) and they warrant broader discovery by U.S. jazz fans. Though their country's best known label casts a global shadow over its competition, the ACT catalog has included Richie Beirach, Lars Danielsson, Vijay Iyer, Manu Katche, Rudresh Mahanthappa, Bugge Wesseltoft, Tore Brunborg and a host of other well-known artists. Among those talents is one the finest—but under-recognized—jazz pianists of the past half-century. Joachim Kühn has had a presence on the label for more than twenty years and returns with his "New Trio" on Love & Peace.
The trio—no longer exactly "new"—has been together since 2015 and had previously released Beauty & Truth (ACT, 2017). Bassist Chris Jennings and drummer Eric Schaefer, two musicians half Kühn's age, lend a vitality to the music that drives the pianist as well. The eleven tracks on Love & Peace are compact and crisp with straight-forward melodies, six of those written by Kühn. Jennings and Schaefer each contribute a composition and two others are from the very different worlds of The Doors and Modest Mussorgsky. The diversity of inspirations doesn't mar the overall theme.
The very brief title track sets the tone leading into Mussorgsky's "La Vieux Chateau," putting Kühn at home with his early classical training. The Doors "The Crystal Ship" is not the first time Kühn has covered the Morrison catalog; "The End" had appeared on Beauty & Truth. "Barcelona—Wien" is lighter fare, conceived in-flight between those two cities. Eric Schaeter's "Lied ohne Worte No. 2" is the most melancholy piece on the album while Jennings' piece is a pastoral and vacillating "Casbah Radio."
Ornette Coleman has long been a jazz hero for Kühn, the two recording the duo album Colors: Live from Leipzig(Harmolodic/Verve, 1997). "Night Plans"—which first appeared on that album—gets an abbreviated treatment here and one that has a more concentrated focus on the basic melody. Yet, as he does with each of the pieces here, Kühn demonstrates his unique skill at maintaining a harmonious core within his unusual musical inventions. In an interview with the Steinway piano company, Kühn said "I like to improvise life, piano, and painting. Really improvise—not knowing what you're going to do. Do it by doing." There's no question that the New Trio does just that on Love & Peace.
Track Listing: 
Love and Peace; La Vieux Chateau; The Crystal Ship; Mustang; Barcelona – Wien; But Strokes Of Folk; Lied Ohne Worte No.2; Casbah Radio; Night Plans; New Pharoah; Phrasen.
Personnel: 
Joachim Kühn: piano; Chris Jennings: bass; Eric Schaefer: drums.


Bill Cunliffe
Bachanalia



By Jack Bowers 
As the title denotes, pianist Bill Cunliffe and his ensemble take a swing (literally) at the great Johann Sebastian on BACHanalia, pivoting as well toward the music of C.P.E. Bach, Sergei Prokofiev, Manuel de Falla, Cole Porter, Oscar Levant and Cunliffe himself. In spite of its classical veneer, this is at its core a jazz session, and as such embodies the essential elements one would expect from such an enterprise. To phrase it another way, Cunliffe transports these masters of the classical genre into the twenty-first century, giving their timeless music a new vantage point from which to entice the contemporary listener.
J.S. Bach is refurbished on the melodious "Sleepers Awake" and Cunliffe's well-designed "Goldberg Contraption," C.P.E. Bach on the light-hearted "Solfeggietto." Denise Donatelli's wordless vocal is used to good effect here, as it is on "Sleepers Awake" (she croons the lyrics on Porter's "I've Got You Under My Skin," underlining a brisk solo by tenor saxophonist Rob Lockart). The first movement of Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3 is an agile and panoramic rendition that runs for more than seventeen minutes and encloses forceful statements by Cunliffe (who reminds everyone what a marvelous player he is), Lockart, trombonist Andy Martin, guitarist Larry Koonse and drummer Joe La Barbera whose sharp and perceptive timekeeping is decisive on every number.
Guest trumpeter Terell Stafford shines on Levant's "Blame It on My Youth," as does soprano Bob Sheppard on Cunliffe's "Afluencia," a fast waltz written years ago for his Latin band, Imaginacion. Trombonist Bob McChesney solos earnestly alongside Cunliffe on "Sleepers Awake," and with Cunliffe and Koonse on "Goldberg Contraption." The snappy "Three-Cornered Hat" enfolds brief but emotive solos by La Barbera, trumpeter Jon Papenbrook, trombonist Ido Meshulam and tenor Jeff Ellwood. High marks to Cunliffe and his teammates not only for braving music that is normally outside their comfort zone but doing so with proficiency and panache, all the while making sure it swings in the best big-band tradition.
Track Listing:
Sleepers Wake; Afluencia; Piano Concerto No. 3, 1st Movement; Solfeggietto; Blame It on My Youth; Goldberg Contraption; The Three-Cornered Hat; I’ve Got You Under My Skin.
Personnel:
Bill Cunliffe: leader, composer, arranger, piano, background vocal (7); Wayne Bergeron: trumpet (2, 3); John Daversa: trumpet (5); Dan Fornero: trumpet (5); Jamie Hovorka: trumpet (1, 6, 8); Kyle Martinez: trumpet (7); Kye Palmer: trumpet (1-3, 5-8); Jon Papenbrook: trumpet (1, 6-8); Terell Stafford: trumpet (2, 3, 5); Bob Summers: trumpet (1-3, 5-8); Jeff Driskill: alto, soprano sax, clarinet, flute (5); Nathan King: alto, soprano sax, clarinet, flute (7); Brian Scanlon: alto, soprano sax, clarinet, flute (1-3, 5, 6, 8); Bob Sheppard: (1-3, 6-8); Jeff Ellwood: tenor sax, clarinet, flute (1-3, 5-8); Rob Lockart: tenor sax, clarinet, flute (1-3, 5-8); Tom Peterson: baritone sax, bass clarinet (7); Adam Schroeder: baritone sax, bass clarinet (1-3, 5, 6-8); John Chiodini: guitar (7); Larry Koonse: guitar (1-3, 5, 6-8); Alex Frank: bass (4, 7); Jonathan Richards: bass (1-3, 5, 6, 8); Joe La Barbera: drums; Denise Donatelli: vocals (1, 4, 7, 8).


Arthur Dutra & Zé Nogueira
Encontros




By Somlivre
O produtor, arranjador e saxofonista Zé Nogueira se junta ao multi-instrumentista Arthur Dutra para explorar novas sonoridades através de temas nacionais de Villa-Lobos, Tom Jobim, Milton Nascimento e Jacob do Bandolim. No lançamento “Encontros”, destacam-se do repertório de 11 faixas, as músicas “Nuvens Douradas” de Tom Jobim e “Carne de Sol e Flor de Lótus” de autoria do próprio músico Arthur Dutra.


Adrian Iaies Trio
La Vida Elige




Todos los temas compuestos por Adrián Iaies.
Recto no Cazador
Para siempre
Efecto Cortina
Paul Bley
Laura
Miniaturas
La Vida elige a quien la Ama (a Ettore Scola)
Sheldon’s Face
Tukish Lentil’s Blues
Waiting for Mora
Personnel:
ADRIAN IAIES piano
JUAN MANUEL BAYON contrabajo
BRUNO VARELA batería
Grabado el 28 de febrero y el 11 de mayo en Estudios Doctor F.
Grabación, mezcla y mastering: Florencio Justo
Arte de tapa: Javo y Caro
Técnico de piano: Roberto Rovira

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